Board calls for all-affordable resi tower at city-owned lot

Hell's Kitchen site could hold 45 stories and more than 300 units

A Manhattan community board has proposed converting a city-owned parking lot in Hell’s Kitchen into a 322-unit affordable housing tower.

The parking lot, at 493 11th Avenue, between West 39th and 40th streets, should be the site of “a 100 percent permanently affordable building,” Community Board 4 wrote in a letter last week to the city’s Economic Development Corporation and Department of Housing Preservation & Development.

The community board pointed to “rising rents in the Hell’s Kitchen/Clinton neighborhood” and an increase in high-end market rate residential units that are “threatening the economic diversity of the district,” DNAinfo reported.

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The letter suggests that the majority of apartments in any such project be two-bedroom and three-bedroom units available to a range of affordable incomes, with any residential tower topping out at a maximum of 45 floors.

Community Board 4 members last year planned to write a “letter of outrage” to state officials regarding development rights at The James Farley Post Office On Eighth Avenue near Penn Station. [DNAinfo]Rey Mashayekhi

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Board calls for all-affordable resi tower at city-owned lot

Hell's Kitchen site could hold 45 stories and more than 300 units

A Manhattan community board has proposed converting a city-owned parking lot in Hell’s Kitchen into a 322-unit affordable housing tower.

The parking lot, at 493 11th Avenue, between West 39th and 40th streets, should be the site of “a 100 percent permanently affordable building,” Community Board 4 wrote in a letter last week to the city’s Economic Development Corporation and Department of Housing Preservation & Development.

The community board pointed to “rising rents in the Hell’s Kitchen/Clinton neighborhood” and an increase in high-end market rate residential units that are “threatening the economic diversity of the district,” DNAinfo reported.

Sign Up for the undefined Newsletter

By signing up, you agree to TheRealDeal Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy.

The letter suggests that the majority of apartments in any such project be two-bedroom and three-bedroom units available to a range of affordable incomes, with any residential tower topping out at a maximum of 45 floors.

Community Board 4 members last year planned to write a “letter of outrage” to state officials regarding development rights at The James Farley Post Office On Eighth Avenue near Penn Station. [DNAinfo]Rey Mashayekhi

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